A Chicago man on parole in a 2001 murder was ordered held without bail today after being charged in the 2010 slaying of an Indiana University graduate in Bellwood.

On the afternoon of Dec. 6, 2010, Andrew Smith opened fire into a car in the 400 block of 22nd Avenue in Bellwood, killing 23-year-old Pleas Anthony Moody, said Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney Adam Delderfield on Saturday.

Delderfield said Smith, now 30, and another unidentified man followed the car from Maywood to Bellwood. Smith approached the vehicle and fired shots at the two men in the car, killing Moody, Delderfield said.

Moody’s 24-year-old cousin, who was riding in the car with Moody, was shot in the back several times but survived, according to court documents.

After the shooting Smith, of the 1500 block of Springfield Avenue, got back into the car and drove off, Delderfield said.

Judge Israel A. Desierto ordered no bail for Smith on Saturday. The second man suspected in the slaying has since died, prosecutors said.

Moody, known to his family as Tony, grew up in Maywood and attended Proviso East High School for one year before his family sent him to live in Atlanta with relatives to get away from violence in his neighborhood, Moody’s sister Chanel Moody said at the time of his death. He returned to Maywood in 2009 after graduating from Indiana State University, she said.

Smith is on parole in three cases from 2001 in which he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, aggravated battery of a peace officer, home invasion and kidnapping. He had been paroled at one point, after being ordered in 2004 to serve at least two more years in prison on top of three years he spent in cook County Jail awaiting trial, according to court and state records. But Smith was arrested again last year in Chicago on a gun-possession charge, when police found him with a gun near his home in the 1500 block of South Springfield Avenue about 6:40 p.m. July 12, 2011, according to court and police records.

Smith was taken into custody, but was found not guilty in April and released from state custody last May, according to court and Illinois Department of Corrections records. Details of the 2001 cases were not available Saturday.